0

Checking in with the newly unemployed: Part 2

Job seekers wait in line before entering a job fair held by the California Employment Development Department in San Francisco, California.

To view this content, Javascript must be enabled and Adobe Flash Player must be installed.

Get Adobe Flash player

Stacey Vanek Smith: Economists expect the unemployment rate in May to stay right around 8.1 percent. That number gets a lot of attention but it can be a little abstract.

So we sent Mitchell Hartman to a job center in Portland, Oregon to talk with people who are just hitting the unemployment lines.    


Mitchell Hartman: The job market is improving a bit. The number of people competing for each position is edging down. So is the average time it takes to find new work.

I met 47-year-old Dwight Dillon at a job center in Portland, Oregon.

Dwight Dillon: I’m unemployed now, I’ve been unemployed maybe a couple of weeks. Let’s see, I sold cars for a bit, I was in sales for a long time.

Dillon says he’s no stranger to looking for work.

Dillon: I moved to New Orleans years ago with $50 in my pocket. Found work in three days. Before I knew it, I was making over a thousand a week. I stayed in a shelter for a little bit, and saved my money.

Dillon says he won’t apply for unemployment benefits -- too cumbersome and time-consuming.

Dillon: Well, I mean, I just paid my child support less than a week ago, so I mean, I’m motivated. I can find day labor if I have to, first. And then from then on I’ll find more work, so I’m confident. Because there’s work available, I think.

The longer it takes him, the higher his chances of getting stuck without a job for a while.

I’m Mitchell Hartman for Marketplace.

About the author

Mitchell Hartman is the senior reporter for Marketplace’s Entrepreneurship Desk and also covers employment.